I went to the LHS and asked the guy at the battery counter for some deans connectors for my T-Rex which i'm currently building. He told me that they use Anderson connectors because the deans connectors can get so tight that you need to pull them apart with pliers. I looked at the difference and ended up buying 3 Anderson connectors because they looked pretty nice. He also said that everyone (I believe he meant in the area) is using the Andersons over the Deans.

They did have a FP or TP battery there with Anderson connectors already on it, but its possibly that they soldered them on at the store.

Before I solder these onto the bird and make up some charge leads, I wanted to see what everyone else is using. I know I can switch ends out later, but I'd rather not have to.

I'm ham radio operator and we use Anderson Power Pole connectors extensively for our radio gear. I personally like them a lot and have been considering changing my Dean's connectors for Power Poles. I haven't yet for several reasons:

1) I haven't seen anybody else in the hobby really using them.
2) They're considerably larger than the Dean's connectors and will take up more space in the heli.
3) They do not snap together as tightly as a Dean's and I would be concerned that under the G loading of 3D maneuvers, they'd come apart. There are clips available to hold a set together, but that's more expense and more bulk.

If you do decide to use them, be aware that they're really meant to be crimped on, not soldered. The contact may give you fits getting it in the connector body. You'll definitely want the security of a soldered joint though, so I'd crimp them first, and then solder. Be careful not to get any solder on the outside of the aluminum contact or it will not snap into the connector body.

__________________RC Helicopter product reviews and general musings: The HeliGeek's Bloghttp://heligeek.com

IMO you didn't get ripped off by getting sold the powerpoles. but, i run ultra deans on everything. the key to those is not overheating them while soldering them up. you can actually get the plastic hot enough to release the contacts during soldering, which will cause the pins to realign--getting the 'hard to separate/put together' issue your LHS was talking about.

but, it is something to think about now. currently you are only out the few $$$ you spent on the 3 you have. but, if you commit to them, you're stuck using them on everything--and, likely won't be able to 'bum a charge' from someone at the field unless you make an adapter.

FWIW, i use the deans on my 600 as well, which pulls a lot more current than a 450...and, they are holding up just fine. check out the video in finless' forum for how to solder the deans if you're curious about what you may be getting into.

Awesome, thanks for all the good advise. I figured I would get this response, but I wanted to make sure. I don't mind having the Anderson connectors, I'll just put it in my wiring kit, maybe one day I'll need them.